Seattle Monorail

From nycsubway.org

Contents

Overview

Seattle's monorail was thought to represent the future of
mass transit when it opened in 1962. Although monorails have yet to
become commonplace in US cities, Seattle's monorail is more than a
relic of a bygone era.

The monorail provides a crucial link between Downtown
Seattle and Seattle Center - Seattle's 1962 World's Fair site, now
home to many cultural, entertainment, and recreational facilities.
With adult round trip fares of $2.50, the monorail has the distinction
of being the only publicly owned rail transit system, in the US, that
makes a profit.

Construction on the monorail began in April 1961. Alweg
Rapid Transit Systems, a now defunct German firm, built the system as
a demonstration project and underwrote the entire $3.5 million cost of
construction.

The monorail began operating on March 24, 1962, shortly
before the World's Fair opened. During the six months of the Fair,
the monorail carried over 8 million passengers.

After the Fair closed, the Century 21 Corporation, which
produced the Fair, assumed ownership of the monorail at no cost. In
1965, the City of Seattle bought the monorail for $600,000.

The monorail begins at Westlake, in Downtown Seattle,
where passengers may transfer to the Seattle Metro Tunnel, an underground busway,
which will soon be converted to light rail use. Westlake station is
located above 5th Avenue between Pine Street, to the south, and Olive
Way, to the north.

Beyond Westlake, the monorail runs northwesterly above
5th Avenue for ten blocks in the bohemian, but rapidly gentrifying
Belltown neighborhood. Turning sharply north at Denny Way, the
monorail then runs above 5th Avenue North for two blocks in the shadow
of the famed Space Needle, along the eastern edge of Seattle Center.

At Thomas Street, the monorail turns sharply west, enters
the Seattle Center grounds, and runs through a portal in the
Experience Music Project (EMP), a musical museum inspired by Seattle
native Jimi Hendrix and designed by Frank Gehry. (Gehry is currently
designing Lower Manhattan's new Guggenheim Museum).

Whether the EMP is a grotesque blob or an innovative and
imaginative design (It was inspired by a smashed guitar!) is a matter
of hot controversy. It is, nevertheless, undeniable that the
monorail's bullet-like passage through the building is an exciting
climax to an already interesting trip. Immediately after passing
through the EMP, the monorail ends at Seattle Center station.

The monorail runs for 0.9 miles. It is built on 62
prestressed concrete piers that support the concrete beams on which
the trains run. The entire line is elevated. A complete, one way
trip takes approximately two minutes.

The monorail's two original Alweg trains, built in 1962,
are still in service. The four car trains, which ride on 64 rubber
pneumatic tires, are powered through 700 Volt D.C. contact rails in
the beams.

Seattle's monorail trains are the only Alweg trains in
operation anywhere in the world today. The trains boast large head
end windows - a rail fan's dream with their great views as the trains
smoothly glide along the beams. With a maximum speed of 50 mph,
Seattle's monorail remains the fastest full-sized monorail system in
the U.S.

The monorail's trains are manually operated. The
operator sits on the left side of the train's head end. Unlike most,
if not all, manually operated subway systems, the operator is not
segregated from the passengers in a separate compartment.

Through the years, the monorail has had more than its
fifteen minutes of fame. Lyndon Johnson, John Glenn, and Sylvester
Stallone all took highly publicized rides on the monorail. However,
the monorail's most celebrated passenger ever was Elvis Presley.
Elvis rode the monorail in 1962, during the filming of It Happened
at the World's Fair, a truly schlocky 1963 movie in which he
starred. The film is redeemed only by its excellent location footage
of Seattle during the World's Fair era.

The sky seemed to be the limit for the monorail when it
opened in 1962. In the same year that saw the debut of TV's The
Jetsons, the public had little doubt that monorails really were
the future of urban mass transit. Even otherwise cautious Seattle
city officials were gushing over the monorail's potential during the
World's Fair. Plans to extend the monorail 12 miles south of Downtown
Seattle to Seattle-Tacoma (Sea-Tac) International Airport were
discussed.

Sadly, once the World's Fair closed, city officials all
but forgot about the monorail. The expansion plan to Sea-Tac was
abandoned.

Incredibly, by 1963, there was even a real possibility
that the monorail would face demolition. This pathetic state of
affairs was the result of the City of Seattle's lack of interest in
buying the monorail from the Century 21 Corporation. Only in 1965,
when the city changed its mind and purchased the monorail, did the
system's continued existence become more secure.

Nevertheless, the city continued to see the monorail as a
mere relic of the 1962 World's Fair - useful only as a shuttle between
Downtown Seattle and Seattle Center. Ballot measures to build a
BART-style rail system failed in 1968 and 1972. Ballot measures to
build a light rail system failed in 1995 and passed in 1996. Not
once, however, in all those years, were Seattle voters given the
choice of expanding the monorail.

Indeed, the city's devaluation of the monorail perhaps
reached its nadir in the late 1980s when Westlake station was
demolished and forced to move one block north during a Downtown
redevelopment project. During this period, when the monorail ceased
operation, one city council member, Norm Rice, later to be mayor of
Seattle, even proposed demolishing the entire monorail. Fortunately,
this trial balloon was quickly retracted in the face of tremendous
public outcry in support of the monorail.

Against all odds, the monorail has survived to this day.
Although it has never reached its potential or matched the hopes of
its designers, it continues to do its job well. Happily, it may also
finally see the expansion that so many people envisioned in 1962.

In 1997, Seattle voters passed a ballot measure to
develop private funding sources for an expanded, 40 mile monorail
system. The proposed expansion of the monorail included two lines and
22 stations, laid out like an X, extending to all four corners of
Seattle and connecting in Downtown.

Unfortunately, city officials have been generally hostile
and, at best, lukewarm to expanding the monorail. Despite voters'
clear support for the monorail, Seattle's mayor Paul Schell and most
of the city council appear to view the monorail as a distraction and
threat to a highly controversial planned light rail system they
wholeheartedly support.

In 2000, the city blatantly attempted to thwart voter
support for the monorail. Hoping to kill the movement to expand the
monorail, the city defunded the Elevated Transportation Corporation,
which was set up in accord with the 1997 ballot measure to develop a
funding plan for monorail expansion.

Seattle's voters, however, struck back in November 2000
and passed a ballot measure to refund the effort to expand the
monorail. On December 5, 2000, the city council's transportation
committee, in response to the ballot measure's passage, approved a
$20,000 down payment on the $6 million earmarked for monorail
expansion planning by the November voter's initiative.

What happens next is anyone's guess, but it seems a good
bet that Seattle's monorail supporters will ultimately get an expanded
monorail system even if takes another 20 years of fighting City Hall.
Public officials cannot indefinitely defy the people who vote and pay
taxes. Average people, not politicians or bureaucrats, have always
been the monorail's greatest supporters. That the system still exists
today and may expand tomorrow is very much to their credit.

Station by Station

Westlake (original station opened
3/24/1962, current station opened 10/1988) is the southern terminus of
the monorail. It is built into a third floor balcony of Westlake
Center, a major Downtown Seattle shopping mall. Entrance to the
station is possible through the third floor of the mall or from a
street level doorway on 5th Avenue. The 5th Avenue entrance is
connected to the station via three nondescript flights of stairs,
enlivened only by a mural of children's artwork. With access to
Westlake Center's elevators, the station is fully ADA compliant.

Upon entrance to the station, passengers pass through
fare control (one ticket booth and turnstile) before walking onto the
station's single boarding platform where outbound trains are entered
from the left.

One of Westlake station's most unusual features is its
single platform design. While there are two monorail beams at the
station, only one is immediately adjacent to the platform. Passengers
may thus simply walk from the platform and into trains on the inner
beam, but trains on the outer beam are accessible only through
retractable walkways that bridge the gap between the platform and the
outer beam trains.

One sight that is never seen at Westlake station is two
trains on the two beams simultaneously. Aside from the fact that a
train on the inner beam would render a train on the outer beam
inaccessible to passengers on the platform, there is also too little
horizontal clearance for two trains to fit into the station at the
same time.

Westlake station was originally located one block south
of its current location in what is now Westlake Park, just south of
Pine Street. The original 1962 station was demolished, in the late
1980s, to make way for Westlake Park, now a focal point of Downtown
Seattle. The monorail's original right of way, north of the site of
the former station, is now occupied by Westlake Mall, home of the
current Westlake station.

Seattle Center (Opened 3/24/1962) Following
the quick, smooth ride past the office buildings and hotels of
Downtown, the multistoried apartment houses of Belltown, and through
the EMP portal, the monorail ends at Seattle Center. Unlike Westlake,
Seattle Center station has never been reconstructed. Indeed, the
station is little changed from the day it opened in 1962. Seattle
Center station has three platforms. Passengers exit the trains on the
two outer platforms and board the trains from the central platform.
The station has two entrances. To the south is the main approach to
the station from the Fun Forest amusement park, which surrounds the
station's north and south sides.

Just west of the station is the Seattle Center House, an
Art Deco edifice housing a wide variety of restaurants, a dance and
exhibition floor, a children's museum, and other attractions. A short
walkway connects Seattle Center station to the main floor of the
Center House.